Letter · 47 BC · Romae

Ad Familiares 13.49

Ad Familiares 13.49

Headnote

Cicero to C. Curio, proconsul, written from Rome between mid-October 47 BC and the third day before the Ides of March 44 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. Romae inter med. ut Oct. a. 707 (47) et 5 Id. Mart. a. 710 (44)). The dating is open across more than three years; the recipient is one of the lesser Curios who held a proconsular command in this period, not the famous tribune of 50 BC who died in Africa in 49.

A brief recommendation in the conventional shape, pressed harder than the usual: Q. Pompeius, son of Sextus, is an old friend, long accustomed to being backed by Cicero’s letters; now that Curio holds the province, Cicero asks that this commendation count for more than any he has ever written. The formula is the familiar one — “receive him into your good faith,” in fidem recipias — but the closing turn, that the beneficiary should come to feel “no thing could have been of greater use or distinction” than a word from Cicero, is the warmest form the genre allows.

Q. Pompeius, son of Sextus, is bound to me by many old ties of close friendship. He has been accustomed, in time past, to maintain his fortune, his standing, and his authority by means of recommendations from me; surely now, with you holding the province, he ought to obtain by my letter the assurance that he has never had a warmer commendation from anyone. For which reason I ask you, in the most pressing terms, that — since by the bond between us you are bound to treat all of mine as your own — you receive this man, before any other, into your good faith on such terms that he himself may understand that no thing could have been of greater use or distinction to him than a recommendation from me. Farewell.
Q. Pompeius Sex. f. multis et veteribus causis necessitudinis mihi coniunctus est. is cum antea meis commendationibus et rem et gratiam et auctoritatem suam tueri consuerit, nunc profecto te provinciam obtinente meis litteris adsequi debet ut nemini se intellegat commendatiorem umquam fuisse. quam ob rem a te maiorem in modum peto ut, cum omnis meos aeque ac tuos observare pro necessitudine nostra debeas, hunc in primis ita in tuam fidem recipias, ut ipse intellegat nullam rem sibi maiori usui aut ornamento quam meam commendationem esse potuisse. vale.

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Ad Familiares 13.49

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